Authors: Justin Richards
He brought the booklet back to Elizabeth and waved it triumphantly in front of her. Sure enough, the photograph showed a very similar artefact, made of stone and carved with the strange curling symbols visible in both the drawings.
âThat's not native American,' Elizabeth said.
âIt is according to the description. It's supposed to be the axe that cut the wood that was used to create a doll-child who came to life and reawakened the winds when they were lost.'
âNonsense.'
âDon't say that to J.D. Sumner.'
âSumner? The collector?'
âThe reclusive collector of all things valuable and ancient,' Davenport agreed, âwho is opening a new wing of his private museum to show off more of his acquisitions. Including this so-called Doll-Child's Axe.' He handed Elizabeth the booklet. âThis is an advance copy of the catalogue for the new wing.'
Elizabeth sniffed. âWell, a story about an animated doll has some resonance with the Ubermensch, I suppose.'
âGot to be worth following up anyway,' Davenport decided. âIt's in the right place, and the resemblance is close enough that it has to be what we're looking for. I'll see what else I can find out about it. And if anyone knows how we can get to see the reclusive Mr Sumner.'
âGood luck with that,' Elizabeth told him. âFrom what I hear he's a very private person. He sees practically no one these days. Even your charms may be wasted.'
âOne can but try. Unless you'd like to see if he'll talk to an eminent curator of the British Museum.'
Elizabeth was already absorbed in the documents on her desk. âNot really,' she said without looking up. âThere's some interesting provenance on this axe-head I'd like to follow up.'
Davenport nodded thoughtfully. âSo could this artefact of Sumner's be your Axe of Theseus, do you think? The same artefact? And if so, how did it end up in America with a different history?'
âIf it did,' Elizabeth said. âPerhaps there are two of these things. Which begs an obvious question.'
âAre the Vril after just one, or both of them? And why?'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The cat didn't feel the heat. In the height of summer, the streets of Los Angeles were oven-hot. But the cat padded along them methodically, slowly but surely getting closer to what it was seeing.
By late June, it had covered most of the enormous city, and was working its way out towards the suburbs. It was close â it could feel it. Rarely resting, occasionally eating, the cat had kept to the shadows. The closer it got, the less it wished to attract attention.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Even without Himmler, Hoffman was kept busy. The Japanese offensive in the Pacific seemed to be stalling, and there were rumours that the Russians were preparing to counterattack on the Eastern Front. Hoffman hoped that was true. He kept his real emotions and thoughts masked as he effectively ran several SS operations from Wewelsburg in Himmler's absence.
But eventually he got the chance to escape from the rigours and demands of the war.
The whole of the forest was burning. It was only six years ago, but the flickering black and white made the images seem older. There was no sound on the film, just the chattering of the projector. They had warned him not to stop the film, or the celluloid would melt from the heat of the projector's bulb. But he could play it backwards and forwards over sections he wanted to see in more detail.
The images were distorted and given texture by the stone wall they were projected onto. Hoffman had not bothered with a screen. He stood beside the projector, occasionally walking closer to make out the detail. Occasionally slumping down in a chair. His eyes never left the screen.
He had seen it before, seen most of the films before. But now he was looking for something more specific than information and enlightenment. An image that resonated in his mind's eye. The more he thought about it, the more he was sure he had seen it somewhere else, before the Vril clawed their way inside his consciousness.
This first film was almost like a shadow play. The dark silhouettes of SS soldiers against the pale flames licking up from the crash site. The trail of devastation composed a nightmare landscape of skeletal branches from shattered trees punctuated by small fires â a scar through the heart of the Black Forest.
The cameraman didn't get close enough for detail. Maybe it was too hot, or he was scared, or the SS team wouldn't let him. Instead he recorded their retreat, carrying what they could salvage. Blurred, indistinct, some of it still burning.
The second film was less frenetic. A calm, almost measured tour through the debris and devastation, lit by the pale morning light. The trail through the trees where the craft had come down was more evident. What it was that had crashed was not. The ground was churned up, blackened and charred. Roped off, waiting for the investigation team.
Then suddenly, on the third reel, there was Streicher â the SS archaeologist brought in with his team at Himmler's express orders to excavate and catalogue the site. In rapid edits that belied the time and care actually taken, they marked off the site into metre-squares and painstakingly excavated each one. Flashbulbs flared on the stone walls as everything was photographed and removed.
But still Hoffman had not found what he was looking for.
He knew, because of what he now was, that the Vril that survived the crash would have burrowed into the ground. They liked the darkness and the shadows, the weight of the earth above them, surrounding and protecting them. But the surprise on the celluloid faces of the soldiers and archaeologists as the creatures burst from the ground was total.
The camera was on a tripod, left to get footage of the archaeology. It captured a confused mêlée â the ground erupting; dark shapes emerging; flashes of gunfire; people running ⦠Then the image skewed suddenly sideways. Something dark spattered across the lens. The picture cut to blackness.
The final reel from the crash site showed the aftermath. The dead bodies being taken away. Humans dumped into a heap, and then burned, the Vril by contrast carefully photographed in situ then delicately removed.
He returned the reels of film to the Vault, passing Kruger on the way.
âDid you find any sign of whatever she is drawing?' the scientist asked.
Hoffman shook his head. âNot so far.'
âYou could review the Ubermensch footage,' Kruger said. âBut I doubt there is anything much in it that's relevant.'
Hoffman had also seen that footage before, and he was inclined to agree. There were photographs of the Ubermensch after it was brought back from Tibet, and more taken after it woke. But what they showed was not the same as the moving pictures captured on the films. The images in the still photographs were ⦠different. What they showed bore no resemblance to a human being. Hoffman did not know why that was. No one knew.
This film had sound with it â documenting the creature's progress as it learned to talk. Or rather, as it learned to talk their modern language. Its own was ancient and forgotten, it had slept â had been
dead
â for so long. It assimilated knowledge at a rapid pace. Occasionally, there were flashes, moments where the Ubermensch's form blurred and became like the still photographs. Then it shuddered back to the emaciated form that Hoffman himself had seen when he met the Ubermensch.
In the recordings of the interviews, the Ubermensch, educated and invigorated, looked more as Hoffman recalled â more like an emaciated human than a desiccated corpse. This was when the Ubermensch made its proposal. Hoffman had been there for that of course. He had been as surprised as anyone that Himmler accepted the Ubermensch's suggestion that it should lead a raiding party to England.
Of course, it promised them knowledge, power, more Ubermenschen in return. âAnd what would you gain from this?' Hoffman had asked.
He never got used to its rasping, tortured voice. âI hear, although that is not the word for it, I
sense
information coming from England. If I go there, it may become clear. If I go there, I can recover another like me. I shall have comradeship. You will have two of us to study and to learn from.'
Except that the Ubermensch did not survive the mission to Shingle Bay. The British â Davenport, Pentecross and their comrades â had destroyed the second Ubermensch too, though no one here knew that except Hoffman. Was the âinformation' the creature sensed actually from a group of Vril in Britain, or was it some sort of interference â either deliberate or unintentional?
âYou're right,' he told Kruger. âI don't think the Ubermensch footage will help. And there is nothing in the Vault.'
âNot everything is still in the Vault,' Kruger pointed out. âBut everything they found was photographed, before it was stored or sent on to von Braun and the others. Kammler was in charge. Now he oversees some sort of construction project.'
Hoffman knew exactly what sort of construction project Kammler was working on. But Kruger's suggestion was a good one. He thanked him, and continued on down to the Vault.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Even now that her SOE training was complete, a summons to Colonel Brinkman's office usually meant that he wanted Sarah to arrange transport for him. If she was busy, she arranged for an army driver. Sometimes Sergeant Green was happy to oblige. Often she drove him herself, grateful for an excuse to get out of the office. If she was lucky, she might need to fly Brinkman or some of the team somewhere.
But today it was not about transport. At least, not in the way Sarah imagined. Leo Davenport was already in the office, leaning nonchalantly against a filing cabinet and smoking a cigarette. Brinkman waved Sarah to a chair.
âWe've found the artefact,' Brinkman said. âOr at least, Mrs Archer and Leo have.'
âThat's great,' Sarah said, wondering what it had to do with her. âSo where is it?
What
is it?'
âIt's an ancient axe-head, it seems.' Davenport pushed himself away from the cabinet and leaned past Sarah to stub out his cigarette in the ashtray on Brinkman's desk.
âDo you know J.D. Sumner?' Brinkman asked.
âI've heard of him, of course,' Sarah said. âEveryone has. Eccentric millionaire who collects, well, just about everything. He endows arts funds, sets up museums, buys art and antiques. But I don't think anyone actually
knows
him, do they? He's some sort of recluse. Does he own this axe-head then?'
âApparently,' Brinkman told her.
âWell, sorry to disappoint you, but just because one of my parents is American doesn't mean I know everyone else who's American. I doubt if I can help.'
âYou might be surprised,' Davenport said.
âOh? I'd have thought you'd have more chance of knowing Sumner. You must have contacts in LA.'
âI do,' Davenport agreed. âAnd it's my contacts in LA who tell me that Mr Sumner entrusts artefacts in his extensive collection to just one shipping company. He wants anything moved, then there's one man he calls.'
Sarah could guess where this was leading. âMy father, I suppose.'
âYou suppose correctly.'
âAnd you want to know if I can persuade my dad to get you an appointment with J.D. Sumner?'
Brinkman shook his head. âNo. I want your father to get
you
an appointment with him. I'm sending you and Sergeant Green to Los Angeles.'
âSergeant Green?' That surprised her more than anything else. âSurely to deal with Sumner we need a trained diplomat, not an army sergeant and an ATA girl. Why not send Guy?'
âIt's a good point,' Brinkman conceded. âBut I think you'll find Green is more than up to the job. As are you, now that you've completed the SOE course. And in any case, although he doesn't know it yet, I need Guy to go with Leo, to France.'
Â
It didn't seem to Jed Haines that the paper's readers would be at all interested in the sixty-eighth meeting of the American Astronomical Society. Especially as it had taken place a couple of weeks previously, and at Yale University. But Felix was keen to publish what he called âlighter' material to distract from the news of the war.
The challenge for Jed was coming up with some sort of local angle to give the story some interest. He hadn't been out of the city for months. For one thing he was too busy, with the paper and with seeing Cynthia. For another, the few times he had driven out in the hope of finding someone who had seen the mysterious aircraft back in February had soon convinced him he was looking for a needle in a field full of haystacks. Now, looking back, he couldn't be sure he hadn't imagined the whole thing.
But on his last trip, he'd driven past a sign to the Mount Wilson Observatory. Maybe that was his local angle? The astronomers on our doorstep ⦠He found the number and gave them a call. The next afternoon, he was driving out of Los Angeles again â but this time with a defined destination and a specific purpose.
The Mount Wilson Observatory was a collection of small buildings hidden away amongst the trees. The pale structures could be glimpsed through and above the woods as you approached. A narrow lane afforded the only way in.
The interviews went better than he had expected. It turned out that one of the senior staff at the observatory had actually been at the Astronomical Society meeting. They were happy to show him the telescope and explain what they did â some of which Jed understood. He took copious notes and snapped a few photos.
He waited until he was leaving before asking, as casually as he could, if any of them had seen anything on that night back in February when it seemed like Los Angeles was under attack. There were some exchanged glances, but it seemed that no one had seen anything unusual.
âHell of a light show though,' the senior guy â Meredith â said. But no, he assured Jed, no one had seen anything. There were no unexplained sightings in the sky on the night of 24 February. And thank you for coming, it had been a pleasure.